UAE petrol, diesel prices lowered for January 2022

ABU DHABI- The UAE fuel price committee slashed fuel prices for the month of January 2022 on Tuesday, with petrol prices lower by Dh0.12-0.13 per litre.
Super 98 petrol will cost Dh2.65 per litre, down from Dh2.77 in December 2021, a reduction of 12 fils. Special 95 will cost Dh2.53 a litre, down from Dh2.66 the previous month, down 13 fils.

E-Plus 91 will be priced lower by 12 fils at Dh2.46 a litre, a decrease from Dh2.58 in December, while diesel will cost Dh2.56 a litre, down from Dh2.77 in the previous month, a steep drop of 21 fils.

This is the second consecutive month when fuel prices were lowered in the country. Fuel prices in December were reduced by 3 fils compared to November prices. 

Oil prices have risen around 50% this year, supported by recovering demand and supply cuts by the OPEC+.

New Delhi: Oil prices extended gains on Tuesday with prices trading near the previous day’s one-month high on hopes that the Omicron coronavirus variant will have a limited impact on fuel demand.

Brent crude rose 7 cents, or 0.1 per cent, to $78.67 a barrel, by 0728 GMT (11.28am UAE time). US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude rose 17 cents, or 0.2 per cent, to $75.74 a barrel, gaining for a fifth straight session.

“Worries regarding Omicron are easing across the globe, resulting in some optimism over demand ... Prices are expected to trade with positive bias,” said Abhishek Chauhan, head of commodities at Swastika Investmart Ltd.

England will not get any new COVID-19 restrictions before the end of 2021, British health minister Sajid Javid said on Monday, as the government awaits more evidence on whether the health service can cope with high infection rates.

However, the upside to prices remained limited after more than 1,300 flights were cancelled by US airlines on Sunday as COVID-19 reduced the number of available crews while several cruise ships had to cancel stops.

China’s local symptomatic coronavirus cases rose for a fourth consecutive day on Monday, with Xian reporting more infections in a flare-up that has put the city’s 13 million residents under lockdown.

Oil prices have risen around 50 per cent this year, supported by recovering demand and supply cuts by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and its allies, collectively known as OPEC+.

“Volumes are thin because of holidays, and markets have already digested Omicron concerns. So, the focus is on the January 4 meeting of OPEC+,” Ajay Kedia, director at Kedia Commodities said.

Investors are awaiting an OPEC+ meeting on January 4, at which the alliance will decide whether to go ahead with a planned 400,000 barrels-per-day production increase in February.At its last meeting, OPEC+ stuck to its plans to boost output for January despite Omicron.

Money managers raised their net long US crude futures and options positions in the week to December 21, the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission said on Monday.

The speculator group raised its combined futures and options position in New York and London by 4,634 contracts to 259,093 during the period. (GulfNews)

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